Home & Country Newsletters (Stoney Creek, ON), Summer 1964, page 36

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evening meetings and to invite more non- members with a view to creating a WICleI' tn- terest than the afternoon meetings do. Blue Lake and Auburn reports "an excel- lent address by the local Public School Inspec- tor on the Indians of their (Brant) County Reserve. Grand View and Terrace Hill had a pro» gram feature on education, with a question and answer period on Education and Schools. The secretary says: "Each member of the executive had a question ready to start things off and soon everyone was taking part, both asking and answering questions. We all enjoyed it." Moyle: A news editor from the Brantford Expositor spoke. explaining how to report a meeting to make interesting reading. Onondaga had an interesting roll call: “Bring a keepsake and tell how it was obtained.” Paris Plains: “At our home economics meet- ing we demonstrated blind stitch hemming on it 1* t A SONG OF TWILIGHT By An Anonymous Mother Oh, to come home once more, when the dusk is falling. To see the nursery lighted and the children's table spread; "Mother, mother. mother!” the eager voices calling, "TlgteCI Ih'aby was so sleepy that he had to go to e . Oh, to come home once more, and see the smiling faces, Dark head, bright head, clustered at the pane; Much the years have taken, when the heart its path retraces But until time is not for me remain. , the image will Men and women now and steady, Grave heart. gay heart. Shoulder set to shoulder, ready! The future shines their own eyes. they are, standing straight fit for life's emprise: how should they be but before them with the light of Still each answers to mr can denied me, 3 ‘ “0 8006] has been My burdens have been fitted strength that's mine, Beauty, pride and ea h v begide mE‘ p Ce ave walked by day The evenin repine? to the little g closes gently in, and how can I But oh. to see on Tlfalling. 1e nurser' win ' ' ~ ' ‘ table spréad; dons glowrng and the thtldren 5 “Mother, mother, mother!" calling. "He couldn't sta to bed 1" cc more. when the early dusk is the high child-voices y awake for you, he had to go 31- s a 36 Put Jomieson, winner of Wellington Counâ€" ty Florence P. Eadie Ontario Women's Institute Scholarship for 1964. Pat has completed fourteen 4 - H Homemaking Club Units and is now in her first year at Waterloo Univer- sily where she is taking on honors course in French and Russian. She hopes, after graduation, to enter the Diplomatic Service of the Foreign Embassy. an ordinary straight stitch machine. So Ill our members had no idea it could be dot Tranquillity and Fairview recommc. trip to the Pioneer Village of Dunn. Burtch: A talk on Juvenile Delinquet. a police officer. Cathcart: “We changed our program Thought for the Day" instead of a Moll ltl found this more acceptable to the memt Falkland: “A tour of the School I} . Blind helped us to understand more ahtu n handicapped fellow~citizens." Claehan: “Having our meetings at .1 brings a better attendance. Young mothu It get out more easily than in the daytime. Middlemarch: This branch was forum -n having a speaker from Uganda and l' a neighboring branches. Another effective l.- er came from the Visiting Homemakers t»- eiation who explained her work and Et'vtlllu n to families needing help. The report sayx 'n a result of this meeting a neglected epr c girl was sent to a centre (Cedar Springs) cc she was cared for and trained tn worth u service." Wallacetown: “Entertain New Cam] in and other new families at a 50:13] on it; Where they can meet others of the COmi‘l‘lltw Caledonia: “We have two supper met . a Canadian buffet in May, prepared by in ‘H- bers to start the new Institute year; and Iii. V " tember to get members out after the hohli a Chinese dinner served by the owner 0] If Chinese restaurant and his daughter.” Brucedale had a Front Page Challenge ‘ ill a commentator, four panel members and W6 contestants. One of their Roll Calls was till-r swered by paying a cent for each aruclr 01 clothing you were wearing. HOME AND cal-WP“r

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